logo
Could Buying Remitly Global Stock Today Set You Up for Life?

Could Buying Remitly Global Stock Today Set You Up for Life?

Yahoo21 hours ago
Remitly is growing quickly but facing a lot of potential threats over news around stablecoins and remittance taxes.
The company can work through any disruptions in the remittance market and has a superior value proposition to the competition.
Shares of the stock look cheap after declining by a third.
10 stocks we like better than Remitly Global ›
The stock market keeps soaring, but Remitly Global (NASDAQ: RELY) has failed to join the party. Shares of the mobile remittance platform have tumbled 33% from highs set earlier this year due to perceived risks over reduced immigration to the U.S., potential taxes on remittances, and the rise of stablecoins for international money transfers.
There is a lot of negativity over Remitly Global stock right now. I believe these doubts are overblown. Here's why buying Remitly stock could set your portfolio up for life.
Compared to traditional remittances, Remitly Global is vastly superior for almost any customer looking to send money from one country to another. Remitly has an easy-to-use mobile application and lower fees than traditional players like Western Union. It is able to do so because it does not operate any physical money transfer centers, but it still partners with physical receiving locations in foreign countries when that is the preferred option for the person receiving money.
Due to this growing competitive advantage, Remitly's send volume is growing at the fastest pace in the industry. Last quarter, send volume was up 41% year over year to $16.2 billion. And yet, it still holds only a small sliver of the global international money transfer market. It is investing heavily in new products such as a WhatsApp integration and tools for microbusinesses, while also expanding into new corridors outside of its original key markets sending from the U.S. to India, the Philippines, and Mexico.
All this has led Remitly's revenue to grow at a phenomenal rate during the past few years. Since 2019, revenue has compounded at a 57% annual rate, growing from $126 million to $1.36 billion.
It can be confusing to see Remitly growing so rapidly while simultaneously seeing its stock price fall. This is because of two huge narratives that are striking fear into investors.
First is all the hype around stablecoins. Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies tied to a fiat currency, typically the U.S. dollar. In theory, it should be cheaper to send money digitally through stablecoins, bypassing traditional systems. There has been plenty of regulation around stablecoins in the U.S. as industry bulls try to get product adoption. However, using stablecoins to transfer money runs into an issue, which is converting said stablecoin into a currency your receiver can actually use in real life. At this step, you will still pay the same fee as before, just with an extra step. I have no doubt, either, that Remitly can begin to accept stablecoins as a form of funds once it gets regulatory approval. This is not a huge risk for the business.
Second, Remitly is facing potential pressure due to immigrant deportations, which could present a small headwind to the business. There is also a proposed tax on remittances. A changing immigration landscape may hurt Remitly's growth ever so slightly, but this tax is nothing to be worried about. It is only 1% and a tax on cash payments only. As it stands, the tax should help Remitly gain a competitive edge over traditional money transfer methods.
RELY Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts
After the sharp share price decline, I believe Remitly stock is cheap and a perfect set-up for investors looking to buy and hold over the next 10 years. It has only 2% to 3% of the remittance market, giving it a ton of room to take share in a sector that has grown with globalization of work.
Today, the company has a market cap of $3.8 billion. It generated $1.36 billion in revenue during the past 12 months and it expects to generate more than $1.5 billion in revenue this year. The business has strong unit economics due to its digital-first strategy, with 60% gross profit margins that have ticked higher year after year. These wide margins should convert to 20% or higher bottom-line profit margins at scale, although today the company isn't generating much in profit because of its heavy spending on product development and marketing.
Remitly's $1.5 billion in revenue at a 20% profit margin equals $300 million in earnings, or a theoretical price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of just 12. In five or 10 years, Remitly's revenue will be much higher than $1.5 billion, too, which should drive the stock price higher. Remitly stock looks like a multibagger in the making; investors could likely buy and watch the returns roll in during the next decade.
Before you buy stock in Remitly Global, consider this:
The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Remitly Global wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.
Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $699,558!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $976,677!*
Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,060% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 180% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join .
See the 10 stocks »
*Stock Advisor returns as of June 30, 2025
Brett Schafer has positions in Remitly Global. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Could Buying Remitly Global Stock Today Set You Up for Life? was originally published by The Motley Fool
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Global Markets Slip With Tariff Deadline in Focus
Global Markets Slip With Tariff Deadline in Focus

Wall Street Journal

time11 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Global Markets Slip With Tariff Deadline in Focus

Stock markets began a crucial week on the back foot amid elevated uncertainty around President Donald Trump's tariff plans ahead of the July 9 deadline. Trump said he will start sending out letters telling countries what rates they will get on Monday and threatened a 10% additional levy on those aligning themselves with 'un-American' BRICS policies. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Sunday said 'tariffs go into effect Aug. 1, but the president is setting the rates, and the deals, right now.' Oil benchmarks were modestly lower after OPEC+ agreed to an outsized output boost over the weekend. Looking ahead, the market will also be eyeing Federal Reserve minutes on Wednesday.

In The AI Revolution, Medical Schools Are Falling Behind U.S. Colleges
In The AI Revolution, Medical Schools Are Falling Behind U.S. Colleges

Forbes

time12 minutes ago

  • Forbes

In The AI Revolution, Medical Schools Are Falling Behind U.S. Colleges

Instead of learning to use the tools that will define tomorrow's care, med school students still ... More memorize biochemistry pathways and obscure facts they'll never use in clinical practice. getty At Duke University, every matriculating student now has access to a custom AI assistant. At Cal State, more than 460,000 students across 23 campuses are equipped with a 24/7 ChatGPT toolkit upon enrollment. These aren't pilot programs. They're part of a full-scale transformation in the way higher education is preparing students for their future careers. Meanwhile, most U.S. medical schools remain stuck in the last century. Instead of learning to use the tools that will define tomorrow's care, students still memorize biochemistry pathways and are tested on obscure facts they'll never use in clinical practice. Following the release of OpenAI's ChatGPT in 2022, college deans and department chairs responded with caution. They worried about plagiarism, declining writing skills and an overreliance on artificial intelligence. Since, most have since shifted from risk avoidance to opportunity. Today, universities are integrating generative AI into tutoring, test prep, research, advising and more. Many now expect faculty to teach AI fluency across each of their disciplines. Medical education hasn't kept pace. A recent Educause study found that only 14% of medical schools have developed a formal GenAI curriculum compared with 60% of undergraduate programs. Most medical school leaders continue to view large language models as administrative tools rather than clinical ones. That's a mistake. By the time today's students become physicians, they'll carry in their pockets a tool more powerful and important to clinical practice than the stethoscope ever was. In seconds, GenAI can surface every relevant medical study, guideline and precedent. And soon, it will allow patients to accurately evaluate symptoms and understand treatment options before they ever set foot in a clinic. Used wisely, generative AI will help prevent the 400,000 deaths each year from diagnostic errors, the 250,000 from preventable medical mistakes and the 500,000 from poorly controlled chronic diseases. Despite GenAI's potential to transform healthcare, most medical schools still train students for the medicine of the past. They prioritize memorization over critical thinking and practical application. They reward students for recalling facts rather than for effectively accessing and applying knowledge with tools like ChatGPT or Claude. Historically, physicians were judged by how well they told patients what to do. In the future, success will be measured by medical outcomes. Specifically, how well clinicians and AI-empowered patients work together to prevent disease, manage symptoms and save lives. The outdated approach to medical education persists beyond university classrooms. Internship and residency programs still prioritize applicants for their memorization-based test scores. Attending physicians routinely quiz trainees on arcane facts instead of engaging in practical problem-solving. This practice, known as 'pimping,' is a relic of 20th-century training. Few industries outside of medicine would tolerate it. How To Modernize Medical Training Generative AI is advancing at breakneck speed, with capabilities doubling roughly every year. In five years, medical students will enter clinical practice with GenAI tools 32 times more powerful than today's models — yet few will have received formal training on how to use them effectively. Modernizing medical education must begin with faculty. Most students entering medical school in 2025 will already be comfortable using generative AI, having leaned on it during college and while preparing for the MCAT exam. But most professors will be playing catch-up. To close this gap, medical schools should implement a faculty education program before the new academic year. Instructors unfamiliar with GenAI would learn how to write effective prompts, evaluate the reliability of answers and ask clarifying questions to refine outputs. Once all faculty have a foundational understanding of the new applications, the real work begins. They need to create a curriculum for the coming semester. Here are two examples of what that might look like for third-year students on a clinical rotation: Exercise 1: Differential diagnosis with GenAI as a co-physician In a small-group session, students would receive a clinical vignette: A 43-year-old woman presents with fatigue, joint pain and a facial rash that worsens with sun exposure. Students would begin by first drafting their own differential diagnosis. Then, they would prompt a generative AI tool to generate its own list of potential diagnoses. Next, participants would engage the AI in a back-and-forth dialogue, questioning its reasoning, testing assumptions and challenging conclusions. To reinforce clinical reasoning in collaboration with GenAI, each student would also submit written responses to these questions: Is lupus or dermatomyositis the more likely diagnosis, and why? What additional data would help rule out Lyme disease? Cite three high-quality studies that support your diagnostic ranking. The goal of this type of exercise isn't to identify a 'right' answer but to strengthen analytical thinking, expose cognitive biases and teach students how to use GenAI to broaden diagnostic reasoning (not limit it). By the end of the exercise, students should be more confident using AI tools to support — but not replace — their own clinical judgment. Exercise 2: Managing chronic disease with GenAI support In this scenario, students imagine seeing a 45-year-old man during a routine checkup. The patient has no prior medical problems but, on physical exam, his blood pressure measures 140/100. Students begin by walking through the clinical reasoning process: What questions would they ask during the patient history? Which physical findings would be most concerning? What laboratory tests would they order? What initial treatment and follow-up plan would they recommend? Then, students enter the same case into a generative AI tool and evaluate its recommendations. Where do the AI's suggestions align with their own? Where do they differ (and why)? Finally, students are tasked with designing a patient-centered care plan that incorporates medical therapy, lifestyle changes and as many GenAI-powered applications as possible. These might include analyzing data from at-home blood pressure monitors, customizing educational guidance or enabling patients to actively manage their chronic diseases between visits. Training Physicians To Lead, Not Follow Colleges understand that preparing students for tomorrow's careers means teaching them how to apply generative AI in their chosen fields. Medicine must do the same. Soon, physicians will carry in their pocket the entirety of medical knowledge, instantly accessible and continuously updated. They'll consult AI agents trained on the latest research and clinical guidelines. And their patients, empowered by GenAI, will arrive not with random Google results, but with a working understanding of their symptoms, potential diagnoses and evidence-based treatment options. If medical schools don't prepare students to lead clinical application of these tools, for-profit companies and private equity firms will focus solely on ways to lower costs, even when these approaches compromise medical care. As medical school deans prepare to welcome the class of 2029, they must ask themselves: Are we training students to practice yesterday's medicine or to lead tomorrow's?

Best Amazon Prime Day Deals Under $25: Our 34 Favorite Budget-Friendly Bargains on Apple, Anker, Roku and More
Best Amazon Prime Day Deals Under $25: Our 34 Favorite Budget-Friendly Bargains on Apple, Anker, Roku and More

CNET

time17 minutes ago

  • CNET

Best Amazon Prime Day Deals Under $25: Our 34 Favorite Budget-Friendly Bargains on Apple, Anker, Roku and More

Amazon's Prime Day sale is almost here, running from July 8 to 11 this year, and we're already seeing plenty of deals live now on big-ticket items like appliances and TVs. But you certainly don't have to splurge to score a great deal this Prime Day; we've also found tons of budget-friendly bargains. Here are the best discounts CNET deal experts have found that you can snag for $25 or less. These deals are a great chance to save big and dodge the rising cost of living, as well as the threat of price increases due to tariffs. There are some big brands here too, so no matter what you're after, it's worth checking out the best Prime Day deals for less than $25, which we've listed below. We'll keep this article updated as deals end and new offers become available. We're also keeping an eye on the competing sales at Best Buy and Walmart. Best Prime Day tech deals under $25 Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K: $25 Take half off the newest Amazon Fire Stick right now at Amazon. It gives you a crystal clear 4K picture, plus it's AI powered and uses Wi-Fi 6 so it's pretty quick, too. Details Save $25 $25 at Amazon Close INIU 10,000-mAh power bank: $20 This slim portable charger is easy to take anywhere with you. It has 10,000mAh capacity, which is enough power to charge your AirPods Pro more than 13 times. Plus it uses a USB-C port. Details Save $13 $20 at Walmart Close SanDisk 128GB Extreme Pro SD card: $22 If you're constantly running out of storage like I do, this 128GB SD card can be a huge help. It even has fast data transfer and up to 130MB/s read speed for quick access to what you need. Details Save $4 $22 at Amazon Close More Prime Day tech deals: Best Prime Day home and kitchen deals under $25 Dash Deluxe rapid egg cooker: $25 Eggs are expensive but cooking them doesn't have to be. This deluxe egg cooker can make hard boiled, poached and scrambled eggs, as well as omelets and even steamed veggies. Perfect for making breakfast on busy mornings. Details Save $5 $25 at Amazon Close Roku Smart Home smart light strip SE: $15 This light strip from Roku is more than 16 feet long and can add some ambiance to any room in your home. Plus, they're smart lights so you can use your phone to change colors, turn them on or off. Details Save $8 $15 at Walmart Close Chefman electric kettle, 1.8L: $22 This BPA-free water boiler is great for making tea, pasta and rice. It can boil almost two liters of water at once. Plus, it has an auto-shut off for added safety. This deal is for Prime members only. Details Save $6 $22 at Amazon Close More Prime Day home and kitchen deals: Best Prime Day outdoor deals under $25 Thermacell rechargeable mosquito repellent: $25 Summer's outdoor activities bring mosquitos. This rechargeable repellent doesn't have a scent or a spray and can repel mosquitos up to 20 feet away. Plus, it comes with a 12-hour refill. Details Save $5 $25 at Amazon Close Cuisinart 13-piece wooden handle tool set: $25 This set comes with four stainless steel skewers, one grill cleaning brush, spatula, a fork, tongs and four corn on the cob holders. It has just about anything you'd need for all your barbecues. Details Save $15 $25 at Amazon Close More Prime Day outdoor deals: Best Prime Day health and wellness offers under $25 Cyrico resistance bands, three-pack: $13 These resistance bands come in a pack of three for different resistance levels and exercises. Details Save $8 $13 at Walmart Close Amazon Basics extra thick exercise yoga mat: $17 This yoga mat is a half-inch thick, offering lots of support. It also offers shock absorption, in case of a yoga pose gone wrong. It's made of NBR foam and wipes clean easily. Details Save $5 $17 at Amazon Close More Prime Day health and wellness deals: When will Amazon Prime Day deals begin? Amazon announced that its next Prime Day shopping event will take place from July 8 to 11. This year, the shopping event will last longer than previous iterations and seeing as it follows the Fourth of July weekend, we're already seeing some great deals. Additionally, Amazon is usually one of the best places to shop because it sells products from almost all major brands across popular categories like tech, appliances, mattresses and fashion, so keep an eye on this page for updated deals. If you're shopping outside of Amazon, we recommend checking out appliance and tech sales at Best Buy, Home Depot and Lowe's, as well as sales on a large variety of categories at Nordstrom, Target and Walmart, among others. How to keep up with the best Amazon Prime Day deals There are a lot of ways to ensure you're getting the latest scoop on Amazon Prime Day offers. The CNET Deals team covers all the best price drops, discounts and deals every day from across the web, highlighting the best offers. Also, we don't limit our coverage to just Amazon, we track all the major retailer sales, sharing the promotions you need to hear about, and there are plenty of ways to hear from us. One option is to bookmark to check out our latest coverage. You can also follow @CNETDeals on X to see everything we publish or sign up for our CNET Deals newsletter for a daily digest of deals delivered to your inbox. Another great option is to sign up for CNET Deals text alerts for curated deals during major shopping events. Remember to install our CNET Shopping browser extension to help ensure that purchases you make all year round will be at the lowest price available.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store